Calistoga - Net-Flow Corporation

Transcription

Calistoga - Net-Flow Corporation
Tribune
Calistoga
Independently owned and published in Calistoga for Calistogans since 2002
April 10, 2015
uNew water rules
Gov. Brown ups the ante on
conserving water in drought
Below
t Put uP or shut uP!
Rosie herself is back in the
kitchen for the season
uworld of outlaws
50¢
7
Back on the track with two
nights of sprint car races
12
Lack of pool lifeguards
eliminates early season
n Opening day set back to May 11
By Amanda Rhodes
Tribune Staff Writer
A lack of lifeguards is the reason for no early opening at the
Calistoga Community Pool but
swim enthusiasts can prepare to be
the first to jump in in early May.
Shannon Clegg, Calistoga
Recreation Services Manager, informed city council Tuesday evening that the pool is set to open
May 11 with a modified spring
schedule and will open with a full
summer schedule June 8.
Clegg, who has been working
a little more than a month as the
new recreation manager, said that
the first lifeguard training began
Monday with a total of five participants and another 10 will begin
training Friday.
During the meeting, councilmember Jim Barnes said he has
received complaints from citizens
regarding the lack of an early
opening at the pool this year.
Clegg said that due to last minute cancellations and being short
staffed, an earlier opening was just
not possible. Going forward, her
objective is to have lifeguard training year-round, not just before the
season starts.
“Our objective is to rampup and have 30 lifeguards at any
one time,” City Manager Richard
Spitler said. He added that Calistoga, along with numerous surrounding cities, has a chronic problem
lacking lifeguards on staff.
Besides raising the hourly rate,
a volunteer junior lifeguard program will be available to 13-14
year-olds who want to learn more
about pool safety and eventually
become city lifeguards.
The recreation department is
currently looking for more interested lifeguards to participate in
future trainings. Participants must
be at least 15 years old. Starting
wage begins at $12 per hour.
World of Outlaws back on
track for weekend of races
Photo by PAt hAmPton
A Cedar Street art display on riding bikes and hoping for rain draws photographers and
passersby adding their wishes for a wet Spring.
New water restrictions
imposed by Gov. Brown
By Amanda Rhodes
W
Tribune Staff Writer
ater rebates are working but more
restrictions will be imposed as Calistoga remains in a Stage II Water
Emergency.
City council voted Tuesday to expand its
water conservation requirements to include the
recent state mandates after Gov. Jerry Brown issued an executive order April 1 ordering cities
and towns across California to cut water by 25
percent this year over 2013.
“We were well ahead of this last year by
adopting a Stage II Water Emergency,” Mayor
Chris Canning said. “Our conservation efforts
have far exceeded the rest of the state of California and at periods of time have surpassed what
the governor has requested of 20 percent.”
In response to Gov. Brown’s January 2014
State of Emergency in California, city council
adopted an ordinance last year declaring a Stage
II Water Emergency for Calistoga was in place.
Mandatory water conservation measures were
adopted in order to achieve a desired water conservation goal of 20 percent.
Under the recent declaration, the governor
upped Calistoga’s conserving efforts by another
five percent.
According to Public Works Director Mike
Kirn, most of the new mandates included in the
state legislatures emergency order have already
been incorporated into Calistoga’s Stage II Best
Management Practices.
New restrictions include operating a fountain
or decorative water feature unless the water is
See WATER page 2
One of the most anticipated
weekends of racing in recent memory at Calistoga Speedway will
fire off the season at the famed and
picturesque half-mile, when the
World of Outlaws Sprint Car Series and more invades the facility
this weekend for the Wine Country
Outlaw Showdown.
For the first time the King of
the West 410 Sprint Car Series
will be co-sanctioning both nights
of action World of Outlaws Sprint
Car Series at the track.
Racing on Sunday night is
scheduled to begin an hour earlier
than Saturday. Opening ceremonies are at 6 p.m. to help get everyone on the road at a decent hour.
The main gate for spectators
See RACES page 12
Photo by AmAndA Rhodes
Storm sends oak tree to the ground
Wind and saturated soil from the recent rain caused a large tree to fall
and completely block the bike path connecting Cedar Street to Rancho
de Calistoga on Monday. Public works director Mike Kirn said during
Tuesday night’s city council meeting that removal would begin as soon
as possible and should take 3-4 days to complete. Kirn was not sure how
much the removal of the tree would cost but said the city has a $5,000
deductible.
PAGE 2
Friday, April 10, 2015
NEWS
Calistoga News
IN BRIEF
WATER
Continued from page 1
part of a recirculation system.
It is now prohibited to irrigate
turf or ornamental landscapes during and for 48 hours following
measurable precipitation, some-
Hotels and motels must provide
guests with the option of choosing
not to have towels and linens laundered daily and must also display
the notice.
Canning said 2,000 pre-printed
placards with the new notice are
available free of charge to lodging
facilities at the Chamber of Commerce.
Calistoga has been working on
ways to reduce water use throughout the area and has seen significant change since creating the Water Conservation Program in June
2014.
According to Anais Hall, program manager for the conservation team, Calistoga achieved a
community-wide water use reduction of 14 percent in 2014. In Dec.
alone, residents achieved a 24
percent reduction over the same
month in 2013.
The program has worked to is-
thing Kirn said will cause many
residents to re-think their automated watering systems.
Under the new statewide restrictions, water will be served
only upon request at restaurants
and other food service establishments, something that has already
been in place in Calistoga.
Weather
Forecast
April 11 - April 16
Day
Sat.,
Sunrise
Sunset
Chance of
High Low
Rain
Apr.
11 6:41 a.m.
7:43 p.m.
70
43
Sun., Apr.
12 6:39 a.m.
7:44 p.m.
73
44
0%
Mon., Apr.
13 6:38 a.m.
7:13 p.m.
76
44
0%
10%
Tue., Apr.
14 6:36 a.m.
7:46 p.m.
77
42
10%
Wed., Apr.
15 6:35 a.m.
7:47 p.m.
71
42
0%
Thu., Apr.
16 6:34 a.m.
7:48 p.m.
77
45
0%
Obituary
Ron Sauvageau
PREDICTIONS FOR THE DAYS AHEAD:
Saturday
Sunday
Partly Cloudy
Tuesday
Monday
Sunny
Ron Sauvageau died Friday,
March 20 at the age of 64. Ron
is survived by brothers Geoff and
Doug, sisters Susan Cutino and
Wendy Hansen, step-granddaughter Jade, and numerous nieces,
nephews and cousins.
Ron, the eldest of six children,
was born in Hawaii on August 9,
1950. The family moved to Calistoga in 1962. Ron loved many
things: music, nature, people,
laughter, animals, food, wine and
Sunny
Sunny
Rainfall this week: 1.5" (Wednesday to Tuesday)
Total rainfall to date: 28.2" This time last year: 22.5"
Total for the 2013/14 rainfall season was 23.1"
Total for the 2012/13 rainfall season was 33"
Rainfall reports from Larry Kuzdenyi on 4th Street, Calistoga
O
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CALISTOGA TRIBUNE
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Helping Women
Through A ll
Stages of Life
sue numerous rebates for waterefficient appliances and landscaping practices.
Hall said that 31 “Cash for
Grass” rebates are either in progress or have been completed.
Three rebates remain for this fiscal year but more will be added to
the next. There have also been 42
rebates, either in progress or completed, for High Efficiency Toilets,
with 18 remaining.
Council directed the water conservation staff Tuesday to prepare
a program to present at a future
council meeting on how to bring
commercial and industrial users
that have exceeded their baseline
allocation into compliance by the
end of the year through conservation efforts.
The Resource Management
System (RMS) is the instrument
by which the city manages, controls and regulates the water and
wastewater resources. The RMS
is intended to act as an inventory
control mechanism that is accomplished by creating baselines for
each commercial and industrial
user.
Currently, the city has approximately 223 commercial and industrial users subject to baselines.
According to the council, about 20
businesses are currently over their
baseline, some a little and some a
lot.
Under the governor’s new orders, cities have more authority
and punitive options to enforce incorrect behavior that has not been
modified.
A water violation occurs if a
best management practice is ignored and documented by city
staff. The first violation results
in a written warning. Subsequent
violations results in a tiered surcharge multiplier.
family. Ron was an entrepreneur
and started his own cooperage. He
had a wonderful talent and passion for creating exceptional wine
barrels as well as other beautiful
furniture and trinkets made from
oak.
He was arguably one of the best
coopers in the Napa Valley and
traveled to the Czech Republic to
share his trade at a cooperage there.
Ron was also a talented poet, and
could often be found writing and
reading poetry. He had a passion
for history, and immediately after
graduating from Calistoga High
School, took a solo trip to Europe,
traveling the continent while staying in youth hostels. Ron was a
gardener and was proud to volunteer his time and ability to grow
tobacco for the Native American
garden in Calistoga. He was living in Cazadaro at the time of his
death. Ron will be remembered
as a friendly, generous, eccentric
soul, offering whatever he had to
people in need, even when he had
nothing of his own.
There will be a celebration of
Ron’s life at The Tucker Farm
Center in Calistoga, on April 12
at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, please
bring a dish and a story to share.
scoops & swirls
This Coupon Good For
I Free Topping
with purchase of
a medium or large
ice cream
or frozen yogurt
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Calistoga • CA 94515
707-341-3132
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Family Owned Since 1978
Calistoga tribune
Friday, April 3, 2015
Page 3
Calistoga News
Curbside
Comments
1,400 colored eggs found in minutes
by 200+ eager Easter Egg hunters
By Claudia Aceves
By Claudia Aceves
Tribune Cub Reporter
If you could live
in the body of
anyone else for
a day who would
it be?
Julie Kaplan
Calistoga
“Santa Clause because
everyone loves him. God
knows I could use some
love.”
Troy Alvarado
Calistoga
“I’m pretty content being in
my own body.”
Crystian Marin
Calistoga
“I’d want to be a bald eagle
and fly around the valley.
You know, just enjoy the
open sky.”
Nearly 200 eager children and
their families gathered beneath
blue skies and a bright sun at the
Logvy Field Saturday morning
for the Calistoga Lion’s Club 35th
or 40th annual Easter Egg Hunt.
“There is nobody alive who
remembers when we started,”
laughed Lion’s Club Secretary
Bill Thomas.
The crowd began to gather at
9:45 a.m. as the children impatiently awaited their cue to begin
their search for the colorful eggs
at 10 a.m..
Former president of the Lion’s
Club Matt Freese began the ten
second countdown to commence
the hunt, the kids could no longer
contain their excitement and were
on the field three seconds into the
countdown.
Less than five minutes later
1,400 eggs were claimed.
“We spend one night boiling the eggs, another day dyeing
them, and an hour hiding them
and it’s all over in five minutes,”
Thomas said, “but it’s worth it.”
The Lion’s Club members,
however, get help from their kids
and friends when they gather to
dye the hundreds of eggs before
the event.
Photo by Claudia aCeves
More than 200 children showed up for the annual egg contest last
weekend at Logvy Park.
Every year the egg hunt is divided into sections for the children in
preschool through the fourth grade,
because Lion’s Club members have
observed that usually once they hit
the fifth grade they no longer want
to take part in the egg hunt.
“This year I think we saw
some tourist’s kids participate,
which was nice,” Freese said.
“It’s open to anyone.”
Among the hard boiled eggs
were also numbered plastic eggs,
which if found could be used to
claim one of many prizes, including stuffed rabbits, marbles and
bouncy balls, donated by owner
of Ace Hardware and Lion’s Club
member Mark Peterson.
“We always do it the day
before so we don’t interfere with
family events on Sunday, and we
get a good turnout,” Freese said.
The Lion Club’s next event is
the Halloween parade in downtown Calistoga.
BEAT WEST NILE VIRUS
PREVENT MOSQUITOES!
MANAGE THE WATER IN AND AROUND YOUR HOME
Kokomo Zipp
Calistoga
“I would be Gustav Klimpt.
He was a symbolist painter.
What I like about his art
is the mix of realism and
abstract in the body of his
work, and his primary subject was the female body.”
Don't wait until the
last minute!
Henry Olumb
Canada
“An eagle, so I can soar
with the eagles even though
I fly with turkeys.”
We Can Help!
JAMES FLAMSON
TAX SERVICE
1422-C Lincoln Ave.,
707-942-4664
Notary Service also
available
Calistoga Cub Football
AnnuAl ElEctions And
ElEctions for HEAd
coAcHEs - JV & VArsity
Meeting
Tuesday, April 21 at 7pm
Pedersen's Residence
1502 Fair Way, Calistoga
Now taking applications!
Please mail applications to:
Calistoga Cub Football
P.O. Box 265, Calistoga, CA 94515
or contact: Paul Pedersen @ 707-494-9917
New Year Special!
Bring in this ad and receive
$29 off your initiation fee!
24 hour 7 Day a week access for
members, Personal trainers, Group
Exercise classes, cardio theater,
free weights, showers and more!
Mosquitoes must have water in order to complete
their lifecycle. Buckets, barrels, cans, bottles,
wheelbarrows, tires, tubs, fish ponds and anything
that will hold water is a potential mosquito-breeding
source. Eliminate mosquito breeding by emptying
and turning over any containers that can hold water.
Chlorinate and run the filter on spas and swimming
pools. Pick up free mosquito fish from your
mosquito abatement district for your fish pond or
water garden.
We are asking all residents to please check their
property for any standing water. If you need
assistance contact Napa County Mosquito
Abatement District.
IF YOU PREVENT MOSQUITOES BY
REMOVING STANDING WATER AND
ELIMINATING THEIR BREEDING
PLACES YOU WILL:
• Minimize the use of pesticides
• Minimize the risk of West Nile Virus and other
mosquito-borne diseases
See our class schedule online @
NapaValleyFitness.com
707-942-5275
1330 Gerard St. in Calistoga.
(Behind the Post office and Firehouse)
workout@napavalleyfitness.com
NAPA COUNTY
MOSQUITO ABATEMENT DISTRICT
707-553-9610
www.napamosquito.org
Page 4
Friday, April 10, 2015
Calistoga tribune
Perspectives
This
'n That
Pat Hampton
Tribune Publisher
How would you answer this question?
Karen Mann’s eldest son
Cassidy Crowley was in
Monterey with his Mom
and brother Taft enjoying
the sights and each other.
They are both Calistoga
young men.
Cassidy saw a man
caught in the riptide in
Monterey Bay and he
jumped in and risked his
Cassidy
own life and saved the man. I
believe that Cassidy was at one time the lifeguard
at Calistoga Hot Springs. And remember when he
had his country western band? And every event in
the valley wanted his group to play?
Congratulations Cassidy, for a rescue that was
heroic and shows your strong character.
■■■■
Maybe you all can help with this minor point
that I have happily turned into trivia that drives
people nuts.
When someone asks where you were born, do
you answer with the name of the hospital or the
name of the town where your family lived?
When I asked Noah where he was born he
answered St. Helena. No, I said, you were born in
Calistoga. Okay, the actual birth was in a hospital,
but he was there for seven hours before we drove
him home to Calistoga.
“Why would you say St. Helena? You didn’t
even spend the night there!” I responded. “You’re a
Calistogan through and through.” It’s a point that
has frequently driven me crazy. When I get asked
where I was born, I respond “Beloit, Kansas.”
Never spent anytime there, it’s just where the closest hospital happened to be. And it burned down
years later. I am flummoxed with what to say when
people ask where I was born–Beloit, but never
lived there.
What do you say? Why? Whoa, even worse:
what if you were born on a boat in the middle of
nowhere? Do you use the name of the nearest city
with a pier where you disembark?
See, sometimes it’s the seemingly easy questions that are the hardest to answer. So email me
your answer to editor@calistogatribune.com.
■■■■
Still riding my bicycle to work most of the time,
and found the biggest challenge I face is when I
have an itch on the top of my head and I can’t get
to it with a helmet on. If you see me slapping the
top of the helmet, you’ll know why.
Letters
from our readers
Dear Editor,
“Play Ball! ”
It can signal the start of a baseball
game or a Little League season. The
phrase means something conveying a
purpose and a message.
Congratulations are in order for the
leadership of Calistoga Little League.
In a brief period they we able to reassemble the community at large and
gather a sponsorship commitment from
the community allowing all players to
participate for free.
The procession of banners along
the outfield fence at Tedeschi Field
demonstrates how Calistoga values the
great game of baseball but more so the
value of its youth.
Kudos to all the volunteers who
provide coaching, support and guidance to the players. To the umpires
who make the tough calls on the field
we say thank you as you have the
responsibility to say, “Play Ball”!
Michael Lennon
General Manager
Calistoga Spa Hot Springs
Hats off to everyone in
Last Gas presentation
Dear Editor,
Last week I came away from the
Calistoga Theatre Company’s latest
stage presentation, Last Gas written by
John Cariani, feeling I had seen a firstclass performance.
The topic was sensitive, and with
the superb acting, and the characters so
well defined and presented, the viewer
could feel the emotions, motives,
and impulses of the characters very
acutely. The play is a touching and
intimate snapshot of the collision of
rural culture, confusing family dynamics, and a nearly unsolvable dilemma
created, in part, by this collision.
Sharie Renault and her troupe have
given Napa Valley many great performances. In a community as small
as Calistoga, it is unusual to find this
calibre of stage production. As Calistogans we should feel proud to have
this theatre troupe and we should also
support it heartily.
Guidelines
Letters to the Tribune should
be sent to Editor, Calistoga
Tribune, P.O. Box 1176, Calistoga,
CA 94515, e-mailed to editor@
calistogatribune.com, submitted
to www.calistogatribune.com, or
faxed to 942-6508.
All letters must be signed and
must include a phone number
for verification or clarification.
(Phone numbers are not printed.)
Deadline is noon Tuesday prior
to the Friday of publication. Keep
letters short, 300 words or less,
and send only one a month.
Of note, Sharie and her cast also
have the additional responsibility to
take down and put up their staging
after each performance since the space
in which they perform is also used
by other artists. They do not have a
space dedicated to stage plays. This
is a challenging addition to a grueling
schedule when putting on multiple
performances.
I just want to say Thank You to the
Calistoga Theatre Company for providing live theatre to our community. I
look forward to attending more of their
productions in the future. Hats off
to Sharie and all the actors and stage
hands for volunteering their time,
labor, and talent for the enjoyment of
the people of Calistoga.
Thankful Butler
Calistoga
Even with the rainfall,
we’re still in a drought
Dear Editor,
Dear residents of Calistoga and
California for that matter:
I fully agree with Helen Archerd’s
letter in last week’s Tribune about
water useage during the drought.
In spite of the almost 2" of rain we
have received here and the almost 2
feet of snow left in the Sierras, we are
still in a drought. We share the same
ground water whether we have city
water or private well water. Those using well water are not under the same
POLITICALLY SPEAKING
City manager
Richard Spitler
942-2805
Corrections or clarifications to printed stories will appear here
only to the past or present are certain to miss the future.
John F. Kennedy
Generosity lets kids play
free in Little League
CITY OF CALISTOGA
www.Ci.Calistoga.Ca.us/
CorreCtion / ClarifiCation
■ The Tribune strives for accuracy in its news reports.
Quote of Note: “Change is the law of life. And those who look
administrative serviCes
Publishers: Pat Hampton & Ramona Asmus
Editor:
Pat Hampton
Cub Reporter:
Claudia Aceves
Reporter:
Amanda Rhodes
Legal Ads:
Ellen Smith
Advertising
Shellie Sakai
Contributors: Chick Harrity, Yvonne Henry,
Jeri Hansen, Linda Williamson, Pad McGinnis,
Gene Duffy Jr., Christine Plant, Frank McKenna
and Terry Ponsford.
We discourage letters with
long lists of people for thankyous; we just don’t have room
and they can be boring to read.
restrictions as those with city water,
but that is not a reason to waste water.
Sprinkling your lawn while it is
raining is a huge waste. The new
restriction that we are not to water our
lawns for two days after measurable
rain, in my humble opinion, is too
soon.
Some ways I try to save water are:
1. Save rain water from the downspouts - several areas. Five gallon
containers or lightweight 33 trash cans.
2. When I get up and am waiting for
the hot water to come, I catch the cold
water and use it for my coffee water.
3. Only flush for #2.
4. I don’t do this, but I have heard
of people reusing their bath water to
water their plants.
5. Take what I call an “RV” shower.
Turn the shower on (You can save the
cold water here, too) get all wet, turn
the water off, soap up, then turn the
water on again and rinse.
6. I hope everyone is already doing
this, but you don’t need to run the
water while brushing your teeth.
I know there are lots of other ways
to save and I’m sure that if we don’t
all use less water, we are asking for
more rationing, higher rates and possibly fines.
Of course if it gets bad enough,
there could be water shut-offs.
I have to go now, I’m getting thirsty
typing all this drought stuff.
John Tauzer
Calistoga
YOUR VOICE IN GOVERNMENT
Gloria Leon, 942-2803
942-2763
942-2810
fire dePartment
Steve Campbell, Chief
942-2822
water billing
Angela Madrigal
942-2801
PubliC works dePartment
Mike Kirn
942-2828
Planning dePartment
Lynn Goldberg, Director
PoliCe dePartment
Mitch Celaya, Chief
aquatiCs & reCreation
942-2844
Memberships:
IRE
Investigative Reporters
& Editors
SPJ
Society of Professional
Journalists
The Calistoga Tribune (ISSN 15415805)
is published weekly by Palisades Publishing
LLC. Subscriptions are $43 annually, or
$38 for seniors 65 or older. (Out-of-county
rate is $50.) Periodicals Postage is paid at
Calistoga Post Office. A newspaper of
general circulation decreed July 12, 2005
by Napa County Superior Court Order No.
C26-29449.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Calistoga Tribune, P.O. Box 1176,
Calistoga, CA 94515.
To reach us regarding advertising, news or
your subscription, call the office at (707)
942-5181, fax us at (707) 942-6508 or
email us at editor@calistogatribune.com.
www.calistogatribune.com
Volume 12 Issue 49
Calistoga tribune
Friday, April 10, 2015
Page 5
Opinion
Help animal lovers convince city council to do the right thing
By Pam Ingalls
I
n just over a week, the City
Council will make a critical decision about animal
welfare in Calistoga. On April 21,
the council will decide whether
to contract for animal control
with Petaluma Animal Services, a
partner of Wine Country Animal
Lovers, or give the contract to the
county agency the city abandoned
seven years ago because of bad
service and high costs.
Prior to 2008, Calistoga contracted for animal control with the
county. The service was unacceptable and the city, faced with
tighter and tighter budgets, terminated the contract. Since then,
the Calistoga Police Department
has referred homeless and injured
animals to Dr. Steve Franquelin,
who has used his own resources to
care for those animals until their
owners or new homes could be
found.
WCAL was founded in 2012
Pam Ingalls and Raider
in part to accept donations so that
Dr. Franquelin could be partially
compensated for the work he has
been providing on behalf of the
city. WCAL and Petaluma Animal
Services are now proposing an
agreement with the city under
which PAS would respond to
animal control calls in Calistoga.
Initially, animals picked up by
PAS would be taken to their nokill shelter in Petaluma, although
WCAL would continue to facili-
tate the search for their owners or
help locate new homes for them.
Once zoning technicalities at the
Calistoga Pet Clinic are resolved,
PAS officers would transport animals directly to the clinic, where
they would continue to have access to medical treatment, humane
sheltering and WCAL’s highly
successful adoption program. The
arrangement would not only keep
the animals in our community, it
would provide a vehicle for the
city to compensate Dr. Franquelin
for the services he has long been
providing at his own expense.
The County of Napa is also
seeking a new contract with the
city and some officials appear to
be considering their proposal. This
is astonishing considering Napa
County Animal Control’s record
of poor service to our community.
It is also unfortunate given the
uncertain fate animals face when
taken to the county pound. Napa
County’s own records show that
an average of 20 percent of the
dogs and cats taken to the pound
are killed. By contrast, WCAL
and PAS both have euthanization
rates of less than 1 percent.
The most significant problem
with the county’s performance
was the extraordinarily long time
it took them to respond to calls
from Calistoga. At a recent City
Council meeting, one councilman
recalled an incident in which he
watched a deer suffer for hours
while local firefighters waited for
county animal control officers to
arrive. Although Calistogans think
of Petaluma as being a world
away, PAS’s headquarters are
only about three minutes farther
away than the county pound, and
in its proposed contract, PAS has
guaranteed a response time to
Calistoga of one hour or less. PAS
also has a record of outstanding
service to smaller communities; it
now holds animal control contracts in Healdsburg and Cloverdale, as well as in Petaluma.
There is another issue that
needs to be addressed, and that is
the enormous debt of appreciation
the Calistoga community and its
city government owe Dr. Franquelin. Should the city now award
the contract for animal services to
the county, it would be a profound
display of ingratitude on the part
of a government agency that
spent many years benefitting from
Dr. Franquelin’s kindness and
generosity, at a savings to the city
of more than a hundred thousand
dollars.
WCAL needs your help to
make sure the city doesn’t do the
wrong thing. Before April 21,
please write, call or visit members
of the Calistoga City Council to
let them know that you support
an animal control contract with
Petaluma Animal Services. Also,
please consider attending the
April 21 council meeting so you
can urge the council to act with
fairness and concern for animals
in our community.
Serious drought~help save water
Poetry Corner
Ted Kooser,
U.S. Poet Laureate,
2004-2006
IllumInatIons
Love Poem
by Melissa Balmain
I don’t think
I’ve ever sold
anything that,
later, I didn’t
wish I had back,
and I have a
list of regrets as
long as my arm.
So this poem by
Melissa Balmain
really caught
my attention.
Balmain lives
in New York
State, and her
most recent
book is Walking
in on People,
from Able Muse
Press.
The afternoon we left our first apartment,
we scrubbed it down from ceiling to parquet.
Who knew the place could smell like lemon muffins?
It suddenly seemed nuts to move away.
The morning someone bought our station wagon,
it gleamed with wax and every piston purred.
That car looked like a centerfold in Hot Rod!
Too late, we saw that selling was absurd.
And then there was the freshly tuned piano
we passed along to neighbors with a wince.
We told ourselves we’d find one even better;
instead we’ve missed its timbre ever since.
So if, God help us, we are ever tempted
to ditch our marriage when it’s lost its glow,
let’s give the thing our finest spit and polish—
and, having learned our lesson, not let go.
American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry
magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2014
by Melissa Balmain, “Love Poem,” from Walking in on People, (Able Muse Press, 2014). Poem reprinted by permission
of Melissa Balmain and Able Muse Press. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate
Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006.
O
hhhhh! Dark clouds
on the western horizon
look to be moving
from south to north.
The last speck of sunlight has
just disappeared behind them and
I am praying for precipitation. A
lot would be wonderful, but any
will be welcome. Probably it will
be the latter. Just enough to give
foliage a bath and barely enough
to wet the earth. We know things
are not good in the water department. Although winter was not
as dry as the previous one, it was
far from normal. My cherry tree
usually provides a profuse bloom
but this year, barely a show. Other
things which I never count on
for much have provided quite the
opposite. It’s always interesting
to watch nature governing itself
based on current conditions. Be-
yond our control and demanding
respect.
By contrast, if you drive down
Highway 280 from San Francisco,
around Hillsborough past Los Altos Hills and on into Cupertino, it
wouldn’t occur to you California
has a water shortage. The hillsides
are more green than I can remember, the result, most likely, of well
timed late rain, and San Mateo’s
Crystal Springs Lakes are full. It’s
deceiving. In a serious but lesser
drought in the 70s, I watched as,
on a regular basis, the high water
marks were visible on the banks
above progressively revealed
lower and lower rings. The bottom of the Springs loomed large.
Not unlike Lake Berryessa.
So, we are asked, once again,
to reduce our usage. It is for us,
doable. If push came to shove
we could buy water in bottles for
our consumption. But the critters
roaming the countryside are suffering. Showing signs of a lack of
available water, rescue centers are
experiencing a very early influx
of abandoned young. Feathered
and furred. Some centers have
issued pleas that we humans put
Tribune MysTery PhoTo
out water so the wild ones have
access. This is in conflict with the
request that we eliminate standing
water around our homes in which
mosquitoes can lay their eggs.
There are solutions honoring
both. Moving water attracts water
drinking insects and wildlife
while discouraging mosquitos
from landing and laying eggs.
Friends use something called a
“water wiggler” available on line
and it worked fabulously. You
can find solar or battery powered
wigglers at a reasonable price.
Keeping an eye out for larva, under any circumstances, is always
advisable.
Water sources should be
adjusted for the height of the
critters they are meant to sustain.
We have a tendency to think bird
baths, not necessarily about dishes
or bowls of water for ground travelers: squirrels, possum, skunk,
raccoon, etc. We may not necessarily seek out their company but
all deserve a potable source of
water and this does not violate
the rule that humans should not
provide food for wildlife. For the
good of wildlife.
by Yvonne Henry
t Last week’s mystery
Do you know
where this
photo was
taken?
u
It exists somewhere
within the Calistoga
Unified School
District boundaries.
Call us at 942-5181
with your guess!
There’s no
prize – only
the thrill
of the hunt!
by Jeri Hansen
Last week’s Mystery Photo was a window treatment at
Sam’s Social Club on Lincoln Avenue. It was correctly
guessed by Alan Rogers, Margaux Singleton, Farrel
Brizendine, Bill Hahn, Cathy Prevost and Cheryle Stanley.
PAGE 6
Friday, April 10, 2015
CALISTOGA TRIBUNE
Calistoga Dirt
Indoors, Outdoors &
Managing drought in the urban landscape
Garden
Page
editor@calistogatribune.com
Getting Down & Dirty
news for gardeners
Workshop focus on ornamentals, flower gardens
It’s that time again! The Spring Plant Sale and Wildflower Show is
on April 11 and 12 at Skyline Park, in the Social Hall at 2201 Imola
Ave. from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. All current members receive 10 percent
off purchases during the entire sale. Free admission to Skyline Park
during the sale.
❁
Forni-Brown-Welsh Gardens plant sale underway
The annual Forni-Brown-Welsh garden plant sale is in full swing,
offering patrons a variety of starter plans, larger plants and seeds at
the Pine Street farm. Oakland gardeners Maya Shiroyama and Jim
Ryugo bring their catalog and vast knowledge of plants. The garden
will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. every Thursday through
Sunday in April, except it will be closed on April 20 for Easter. It is
open the same hours every Thursday through Saturday in May.
❁
Calistoga Garden Club meets next week
Calistoga Garden Club meets on Thursday, April 16 at 2 p.m. in
the Tucker Room at the golf center, 2025 Grant St. Newcomers are
welcome. Call 942-6768 for more information.
❁
Pepperwood offers free wildflower walk
Take in the beauty of the season as Pepperwood staff and volunteers point out what is blooming. Meet at the Red Barn, 3450 Franz
Valley Rd, Santa Rosa. Walk is from 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Ages 10 and
up welcome. Go to www.pepperwoodpreserve.org/ for more information.
Napa County Master Gardeners offers gardeners a checkoff list
to keep gardens thriving but also
reduce water use.
• Check, adjust, and repair
pipes, valves, and sprinkler heads
to make sure there are no leaks
and no water is being wasted.
• Replace worn out irrigation
system components and consider
upgrading systems that are over
10 years old with new, higher efficiency components.
• Convert sprinkler or bubbler
heads to drip irrigation wherever
possible.
• Hydrozone group plants with
the same water needs onto the
same valve or line.
• Move drip emitters away
from the crowns, out to the drip
line for trees and shrubs that have
grown since the original irrigation
was installed.
• Irrigate in the early morning,
between the hours of 2 a.m. – 7
a.m., when there is no wind and
little evaporation.
• Know your soil type and water
to match the infiltration rate of
your soil to avoid runoff. Irrigate
more frequently with shorter runtimes for sandy soil, so that water
is not wasted below the rooting
depth. Irrigate less frequently but
with longer runtimes for loam and
clay soils.
• On slopes and areas with
compacted soils, avoid water
runoff by using multiple (cycled)
start times (also called pulse irrigation) to allow water to soak in
slowly.
• Adjust spray heads so that no
water runs off onto sidewalks or
into the street.
• Water as little as possible!
• Operate your controller
manually. Check soil moisture
(dig down or use a moisture
meter) and water only when the
soil is dry.
• Adjust irrigation frequency
and runtimes down gradually, to
water plants as little as possible
to keep them alive. Get used to
plants that don’t look perfect.
• Consider upgrading the
irrigation controller to a ‘smart’
controller, which automatically
calculates seasonal setbacks.
Prioritize Your Plants
• Determine which plants are
susceptible to drought stress.
When prioritizing what to keep
and what to let go, consider
replacement costs, prominence in
the landscape, and the length of
time for plants to reach maturity.
• Be aware there may be NO
landscape watering allowed
if conservation measures are
inadequate. Consider letting go of
high water use plants (even those
that are high priority), and replacing them later with more drought
tolerant plants.
• High priority plants are usually trees, shrubs, and fruit and
nut trees – that provide shade, are
expensive to replace, and take a
long time to mature.
• Those that have not yet
reached mature size will require
the most irrigation
New Plants
Do not introduce new plants
to your landscape during a severe
drought. Even California native
plants aren’t drought-resistant until they become well established.
When water restrictions allow for
new plants to be introduced into
your landscape, select drought
tolerant varieties appropriate for
your climate zone. Introduce new
plants during the fall, allowing
them to become established by
winter rain.
Ornamental Trees
One or two deep irrigations
with a garden hose several weeks
apart in spring and summer will
often keep trees alive through
summer, especially if roots are
relatively deep. Will drop leaves
or wilt under severe water shortage, but with appropriate care will
survive.
Fruit and Nut Trees
Early-season water applications will keep trees alive, but
reduces fruit production
To produce a good harvest,
deciduous fruit and nut trees need
adequate water in their root zones
continuously from bloom until
harvest.
Let us help you with your garden!
Silverado Ace Hardware
❖ SPECIAL OFFER-
2 cu. ft. Kellogg planting mix
or Harvest Supreme buy 3
get 1 free!
April 11 - Spring Sharpen Event 9am-1pm
For all your tree care needs
❖ Redwood planter boxes
4’x 8’, 3’x 6’, 2’x 4’
Bring your tools to sharpen by
Razor’s Edge and sharpen up
your yard with our great
merchandise and event specials.
Call today for a free estimate
Master Gardeners will be
here on April 11 & 12 to
answer all of your gardening
questions
is the place!
Mon-Sat 8–6 • Sun 9–3 • 1450 Lincoln Avenue • 942-4396
Let’s Save 20% for Mother Earth,
the Blue Planet!
�
Pacific Tree Care
STAR GARDENS
Turn off water when brushing teeth or
shaving: save 10 gallons/person/day
942-0261
Come see our ‘Beat the Drought’ tips and display.
We stock a diverse selection of climate appropriate plants.
Visit us in our 1/2 acre natural setting
Certified Arborists on Staff
21288 Washington Street • Middletown • 707.987.0998
Spring 7 days a week 9 - 5 (weather permitting)
LOCAL ORGANIC COMPOST
Harvest Compost – Made from grape seeds, skins &
stems. CDFA & OMRI Certified Organic.
Restaurant Blend – Made with Harvest Compost
�
Fix leaky toilets: save 30-50 gallons/
toilet/day
and local restaurant food waste. High in Calcium!
CDFA Certified Organic.
�
Take a 5 minute shower instead of 10: save 12.5 gallons/
person/shower with efficient showerhead
�
Wash only full loads: save 15-45 gallons/load
from residential clean green cart program, ground and
screened to 3/8 inch, then blended with Harvest Compost. CDFA Certified Organic.
�
Only run full dishwasher loads: save 5-15 gallons/load
�
Fill the Bathtub halfway or less: save 12 gallons/bath
�
Use mulch on soil surface: save 20-30
gallons/1,000sqft
Blended Compost –- 2/3 of this material is collected
Top Soil – Consists of loam, gypsum, sand and blended compost.
for
Call elivery
or d s
B
O
F
price
1285 Whitehall Lane, St. Helena • 963-7988
CALISTOGA TRIBUNE
Friday, April 10, 2015
PAGE 7
Calistoga News
Put Up or Shut Up: Get your fair entries ready!
Fair Warning
OK! Who opened the last
jar of Pickled Beets with Vince
Tofanelli’s 2008 Family Vineyard,
Napa Valley Zinfandel?
Why do you ask?
Because the Napa County
Fair is creeping up and if you
are planning on submitting a jar
or two of last summer’s canning
glories, now is the time to secure
two jars of each item you plan to
enter and safely put them aside
and out of sight. I did this two
weeks ago and discovered I have
15 items to enter.
So 30 jars are safely put
away…one for show during the
Fair and one for the judge to taste.
Both jars will require a label on
the bottom of the jar with name
and address. Plus, a nice looking label on the side of the jar
identifying the contents. Those
pesky address labels we all get
in the mail work perfectly for the
bottom sticker. Anything put up
this year is of course included i.e.
strawberry jam, rhubarb and other
early crops.
One of my faves from last
summer was Roasted Peach
Butter. Tastes like it did the day
I made it. Unfortunately it is
beginning to turn amber and I will
be lucky to have two jars looking
good by Fair time. I have researched the why of top browning
in yellow fruit preserves…poor
seal (not in this case) or stored in
why did I make so many Watermelon Pickles?
Rosie Dunsford
Calistoga Inn & Brewery
too warm a place. I’m going with
too warm a storage place. I moved
the peach butter to the fridge last
fall but not soon enough. This
year it goes in right away.
My very, very best fave was
the Slow Roasted Tomato Slabs
packed in olive oil and balsamic
vinegar. Not only are they delish
but they last forever in the fridge
after opening.
My biggest disappointment
is the Bread and Butter Pickle.
Mushy! The Ball Complete Book
of Home Preserving says I should
add Pickle Crisp. Hmmmm. Also,
NOW OPEN in Calistoga !
The Napa County Fair - 2015
Dorothy Bennett – Best of Show
Award – Preserved Foods
I never met Dottie but I sure
knew of her. Anyone entering an
item in the fair stood cheek by
jowl beside Ms. Bennett’s entries…dozens of entries. Painting,
sculpting, cooking, sewing, weaving, flower arranging, canning,
baking, horticulture, knitting,
crocheting and quilting to name
a few. So why not give Dottie
her due this year and have a nice
award in her name. Unfortunately
Dottie passed in December of
2013. You are remembered girlfriend.
Napa County Fair
Culinary Arts Preserved Foods
Important Dates
Registration opens Friday, April
10, 2015. Pick up forms in Fair
Office
Registration Closes Friday, June
26 – 7 p.m.
Bring your items to the Butler
Pavilion Friday, July 3 from 7 - 11
a.m. Judging happens Friday, July
3 - 1 p.m.
Pickup on Saturday, July 4, 11
p.m. - 12 a.m. (after fireworks) or
Sunday, July 5, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m.
What’s Up?
Ahhh… those nice farmers in
Santa Rosa with the What’s Up
veggie stand. Not much yet but
I do see lots of fava beans in the
field. Sometimes they pop open
with nice lettuce, spring garlic
and micro greens. Soon. Soon.
I am already scouting out folks
who might have prunus subcordata, or the kissing cousins Klamath
plum, Oregon plum, Sierra plum
or to me Sand Plums, growing
along a vineyard or wooded lot. I
like the yellow variety.
They need to be firm and just
under-ripe to make the best jam.
The little pits are a pain. I have
done everything pitting them –
strawberry huller, sharp knife
point, small melon baller, cherry
pitter and a large sledge hammer
– to picking twice what I need and
THE SECOND BI-ANNUAL
Awaken
Your Mind,
713C Washington Street, Calistoga
Body & Spirit
707 942 4662
open daily 6am - 6pm
Coming from Calistoga turn right off of
Main onto Charter Oak Coming from Napa turn left off of
Main onto Charter Oak
707.227.5529
Fraternal
financial –
what’s that?
We’re fraternal – We offer benefits, social activities
and volunteer opportunities to our members.
Meet the authors of
“Frankie’s Journey:
The Silk Road to Napa”,
on Saturday, April 18th,
11:30 - 1:30
We’re financial – We help members plan for life with
personalized advice and quality financial solutions.
Let’s talk.
Julia Woodmen
Leza, FIC
Modern
of America
Lic #0161218
Agent name
P.O.Lic.
Box
143
(State)
(number)
Address
Calistoga,
CA 94515
City, State
(563) 299-8784
Phone
Modern
Woodmen email
julia.leza@mwarep.org
Sand Plum
Jam
3-4 lbs. plums
½ the weight
in sugar
Cook until it
sheets
Yield 9-half
pints
Yup! That’s
all she wrote.
Worked just
fine. On
another note,
through same
girlfriend, if you are in an Indian
grocery store, pick up a packet
of Panch Puran Indian five spice
mixture. Inexpensive. We used to
make a fabulous tomato jam using
this spice blend. Recipe to come
along with the tomatoes. Not much
going on in canning world this
time of year...later!
THE MARTIN-O’NEIL CANCER CENTER WELCOMES YOU TO
Espresso
is now at the St. Helena Car wash.
Stop by wash your car
and let us dry it for you.
Or call and we will come to you.
Use our water not yours!
tossing the pit side of the plum…
heh, heh.
Cutie Kevin West has a Peak
Seasons by Region section in his
excellent Saving the Season. The
California section says plums
begin in June and that’s about
when I recall sand plums coming
in. Scout now and monitor the
progress. My girlfriend Charlotte
and I would pick and jam Sand
Plums every summer. It is my
favorite jam
and here is the
recipe:
S
E
R
I
E
S
Awaken Your Mind, Body and Spirit is a free lecture series offering
unique presentations to inspire change towards living a healthier life.
Michael Finkelstein, MD | April 27, 2015
Transform the War into a Treasure Hunt
Dr. Finkelstein, renowned physician who specializes in Integrative Medicine and
author of Slow Medicine: The Best Quick Fix for your Health, has discovered that
the most effective approach to cancer is embracing it as an opportunity, instead of
framing it as a battle. Rather than making cancer the focus by fighting the disease,
patients make themselves the focus by optimizing every area of their liveseating nutritious food, aligning the body and mind through guided imagery and
meditations, practicing self-expression through music, dance, writing and painting,
enjoying natural settings. Learn how to cultivate the “terrain” of life that is not only
passionate and joyous, but as a byproduct, is inhospitable to cancer.
Andrew W. Kneier, Ph.D | May 4, 2015
Inner Resources When Facing Life’s Challenges
Mondays
April 27, 2015
& May 4, 2015
5:30-7:30 pm
Yountville
Community Center
6516 Washington Street
Yountville
Dr. Kneier’s talk will focus on the psychological and spiritual resources we all
possess when facing life’s challenges, especially those that come in dealing
with a life-threatening illness. Examples will be given from his book, Finding Your
Way Through Cancer, which draws on his work with cancer patients at the UCSF
Comprehensive Cancer Center. From theology, we gain perspective on the God
within us and the meaning of prayer and spiritual resources to be drawn upon in
time of need. Examples will be given from William James’ classic, The Varieties
of Religious Experience.
HORS D’OEUVRES AND LIGHT REFRESHMENTS | RSVP 707.967.7518
SHARPSTEEN MUSEUM
1311 Washington Street, Calistoga
Hours: 11am - 4 pm daily
Visit us on the web! www.calistogatribune.com
707-942-5911
www.sharpsteenmuseum.org
FRA0312
A Community Partnership Ad sponsored in part
by Calistoga Spa Hot Springs
Cover to Cover, Just Calistoga! Call us at 942-5181
PAGE 8
Friday, April 10, 2015
Calistoga Tribune’s Space 102
Crossword Puzzle
CALISTOGA TRIBUNE
Calistoga Fun
T
R I B U N E
W
C
O R D S E A R C H
Baseball is a bat-and-ball game played between
two teams of nine players each of whom take
turns batting and fielding. Evolving from older
games, an early form of baseball was played in
England by the mid-18th century. The game was
brought by immigrants to North America, where
the modern version developed. Answers can be
across, up, down, diagonal and backwards.
TAKE ME OUT TO
THE BALL GAME
3 Letter Words
HAT
HIT
OUT
RUN
WIN
L
I
N
I
W
I
L
I
D
M
R
B
A
S
E
B
A
L
L
N
4 Letter Words
BALL
GAME
SAFE
5 Letter Words
CATCH
FIRST
PITCH
STEAL
Across
1 Subsequently
6 Primitive plant
10 Eden evictee
14 Conductor Walter
15 Needy
16 Sandwich shop
17 Hardware purchase
18 Pretoria’s
province
20 Trustworthy
22 Coiffure
23 Supercomputer pioneer
24 Some dairy cows
25 Epic of a wanderer
28 Strong fiber
29 1991 Kenneth Branagh
thriller
31 Freeway exit
35 Like some vbs.
36 Roman sea god
39 Romanian monetary unit
40 Playthings
42 Rising again
44 Snacks in shells
47 Least well done
48 Language of Provence
51 To be in Rome
52 Appear unexpectedly
53 Intro
57 Coordination centers
59 Britain’s PM
60 “__ the Roof “
61 Runaway win
62 Smear
63 No longer active: Abbr.
64 Ring sport
65 Follow
Down
1 Contraction contraction
2 Cleaving tool
3 Jethro __
4 Lured
5 Floral specialist
6 Suitably
7 Anecdotal knowledge
8 Former part of Portuguese
India
9 City on the Rhine
10 Guide
11 “The Wreck of the Mary
__”
12 “Luck Be __”
13 Film director Forman
19 Agra attire
21 Emblem
24 Two-faced god
25 Mine passage
26 Architect Saarinen
27 Not, in dialect
28 Ceremonies
30 Airport parking area
32 Out of the wind
33 __ sana in corpore sano
34 Hit on the green
37 Tend
38 Not permanent
41 Wage
43 Invisible troublemaker
45 “Three men in __”
46 Frolics
48 Happen
49 Crinkly cloth
50 French landscape painter
51 Sister of Calliope
53 Fruit with a stone
54 Barbara, to friends
55 Stead
56 First name in mysteries
58 Bud’s movie partner
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CALISTOGA CITY COUNCIL
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the City Council of
the City of Calistoga that a PUBLIC HEARING will
be conducted on Tuesday, April 21, 2015, at or
after 7:00 p.m in the Calistoga Community Center, 1307 Washington
Street, City of Calistoga, California, at which time and place testimony will
be considered on the following matter:
Consideration of a resolution to adopt a fee to be paid in-lieu of
providing affordable housing units within residential projects, per
Calistoga Municipal Code Section 17.08.020(D)(4)(a)
The proposed resolution is not a project within the meaning of Section
15378 of the State California Environmental Quality Act Guidelines,
because it has no potential for resulting in physical changes in the
environment, directly or ultimately.
Beginning Friday, April 17, 2015, no later than 5 p.m., the staff
report and proposed resolution for this item will be available
online at www.ci.calistoga.ca.us by clicking on the City Council
meeting on the City Calendar, and at the City Administrative
offices located at 1232 Washington Street. For additional information, please contact the City Clerk’s office at 707.942.2805.
NOTICE: If you challenge the City’s decision on this matter in court,
you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else
raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City Council at, or prior to, the public
hearing. Judicial review of any City administrative decision may be
heard only if a petition is filed with the court not later than the 90th day
following the date upon which the decision becomes final. Judicial
review of environmental determinations may be subject to a shorter
time period for litigation, in certain cases 30 days following the date of
final decision.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY OF CALISTOGA CITY COUNCIL
Kathy Flamson, City Clerk, City of Calistoga
April 10, 2015
6 Letter Words
BATTER
CLEATS
HELMET
PICKLE
RUNNER
STRIKE
UMPIRE
L
T
I
H
R
B
A
T
T
E
R
H
E
E
O
B
C
F
I
N
F
E
E
S
U
T
T
C
A
E
E
C
E
O
R
A
L
N
N
P
A
T
A
H
N
S
U
H
A
L
G
S
T
E
A
L
R
A
C
D
I
A
B
O
N
R
O
B
M
P
I
T
C
H
E
R
I
L
F
M
GROUNDER
R
I
A
R
E
I
I
E
D
C
O
A
C
H
E
S
N
G
L
B
3 Letter Words
HAT
9 Letter Words
HIT
SHORTSTOP
OUT
SMALL BALL
RUN
WIN
7 Letter Words
BASE MEN
BUNTING
CATCHER
COACHES
FLYBALL
HOME RUN
PITCHER
B
S
S
T
R
F
T
E
P
M
P
E
L
I
P
I
C
K
L
E
A
A
E
S
T
E
K
I
R
T
S
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10 Letter Words
IN FIELD FLY
11 Letter Words
6 Letter Words
OUTFIELDERS
BATTER
CLEATS
HELMET
4 Letter Words PICKLE
SUDOKU
RUNNER
BALL
in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box
STRIKE
GAME Fill
contains the digits 1 through 9. No number may be repeated in any
SAFE row, column orUMPIRE
box.
8 Letter Words
BASEBALL
FAIR BALL
FAKE BUNT
FOUL BALL
5 Letter Words 7 Letter Words
BASEMEN
CATCH
BUNTING
FIRST
- see Answers on page 10
Cameo
Cinema”
“T A
S
he
rT of
ToryTelling
963-9779
FRI APR 10 - THU APR 16
Woman in gold (PG-13)
Fri 12:00, 5:45 & 8:30pm - Sat/Sun 3:00,
5:45 & 8:30pm - mon 3:00, 5:45 & 8:30pm
tue 5:45 & 8:30pm - Wed 3:00 & 8:30pm
thu 3:00, 5:45 & 8:30pm
The Wind Journeys (Not Rated)
tue 1:00pm
capTuring grace(R) Wed 5:45pm
Film School
1340 MAIn STReeT, ST. HelenA
www.cameocinema.com
St. Luke’s
Episcopal Church
A place of Welcome,
Service and
Spiritual Growth.
Sunday Service
10: 0 0 am
holy Communion
Children’s Program
with
and
707-942-6007
1504 Myrtle Street,
Calistoga, CA 94515
www.stlukescalistoga.org
Visit us on Facebook
Ranchettes annual
spRing sale
Saturday, april 11
IT’S THAT TIME OF YEAR AGAIN
New Year Special!
Bring in this ad and receive
$29 off your initiation fee!
for the Rancho de Calistoga
Spring Sale. Saturday,
April 11th, 8am to 3pm
in the Recreation Hall,
2412 Foothill Blvd.,Calistoga.
Great bargains on:
clothing, crafts, books,
dishes/glassware, collectibles,
tools, furniture, jewelry,
Christmas decorations,
“Almost Antiques”, and lots
more!
24 hour 7 Day a week access for
members, Personal trainers, Group
Exercise classes, cardio theater,
free weights, showers and more!
Admission is Free.
1330 Gerard St. in Calistoga.
(Behind the Post office and Firehouse)
Proceeds Benefit
Senior Projects
workout@napavalleyfitness.com
See our class schedule online @
NapaValleyFitness.com
707-942-5275
CATC
COAC
FLYB
HOME
PITCH
8 Lett
BASE
FAIRB
FAKE
FOUL
GROU
9 Lett
SHOR
SMAL
10 Let
INFIE
11 Let
OUTF
Calistoga tribune
Friday, April 10, 2015
Calendar
Calistoga Events
apr. 10 - apr. 15
of calistoga events
April
point out what is blooming. Meet at
the Red Barn, 3450 Franz Valley
Rd, Santa Rosa.Walk is from 10
a.m. - 12 p.m. Ages 10 and up welcome. Free, but donations are
always appreciated. Go to www.
pepperwoodpreserve.org/ for more
information and/or to reserve.
Now through the end of May get
your cat fixed for free. Calistoga
Cat Action Team will pay to spay or
neuter your pet cat and give it a
rabies shot. Appointments must be
made through CCAT. Contact
Kristin Casey at 942-1127.
MiniKickers
❧ Reservation Cut-Off for
Sharpsteen Docent Lunch: The
Sharpsteen Museum is hosting its
annual Docent Appreciation Luncheon on Wednesday April 15th. This
is a special thank-you served up
every year for docents, and open to
the public: members and non-members alike. Must sign up by to-day at
the museum. Cost is $10.00/ person
(no charge to docents!). Call 9425911 for more information.
❧ Shelly Shows Movies: Free
movie at the Community Presbyterian Church (the green church)
at the corner of Third and Washington Streets. Show starts 7 p.m.
Open to all. Refreshments served.
This week, see “Maleficent” with
Angelina Jolie. For more information, call Shelly at (707) 293-0847.
❧ Technology Training at
Calistoga Library: Every Friday
during library hours, staff will offer
free technology, ebook and audiobook training. Bring your smartphones, tablets or laptops to receive
basic one-on-one instruction. Computers will also be available for your
use. Please come in or call to schedule a 30-minute appointment at 1108
Myrtle Street. For more information
or appointments, call library associate
Daniel Cottrell at 942-4833 or daniel.
cottrell@countyofnapa.org.
11 SATURDAY
❧ Calistoga Farmers Market:
Open year ’round, every Saturday
morning, in the Sharpsteen Museum
Plaza, Washington Street. Hours 9
a.m. - 1 p.m. Locally grown seasonal produce; cut flowers and nursery
grown plants; gourmet and prepackaged foods; fresh seafood;
breakfast treats and fruit pies, as
well as gift items. Live music.
❧ Zumba®: Party yourself into
shape! This Latin-inspired, easy-tofollow, dance-fitness class is great
for all levels. The class is held in
the Calistoga Jr. High Gym (the old
gym), 1608 Lake Street, 8:30 - 9:30
am. Fee is $5 a class for adults; $4
for seniors; $8 for non-resident
adults; $6 for non-resident seniors.
No registration needed, drop-ins
welcome. Sponsored by the city’s
Recreation Services. Go to www.
calistogarecreation.com.
❧ County Medi-Cal Services: Get
help with Medi-Cal, food stamp
questions, or filling out applications. A Medi-Cal worker will be in
Calistoga at the Family Center,
1705 Washington Street, Suite G,
every Friday from 8:30 a.m. - 4:30
p.m. to provide help. For information or appointments call Elena
Mendez at 707-341-3185.
❧ Book Club: Meeting at the Calistoga Public Library, 1108 Myrtle
Street, at 11 a.m. Book discussion
for this month is The Telling Room
by Michael Paterniti. For more
information call Daniel Cottrell at
942-4833.
❧ Ranchettes Annual Spring
Sale: At Rancho de Calistoga Recreation Hall, 2412 Foothill Boulevard,
from 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Great bargains
on a huge variety of items. Admission is free. Proceeds benefit senior
projects.
❧ Pepperwood Wildflower Walk:
Take in the beauty of the season as
Pepperwood staff and volunteers
❧ World of Outlaws Sprint Car
Races: See April 11 listing.
13 MONDAY
Could your child be the next Pelé
or Hamm? Check out our April
14 listing about youth soccer.
Optician Judy Flynn
fills visual, fashion and
safety eyeglass prescriptions. Call today!
963-8898
FOR EXAMS
Dr. Julie Perry, MD
or
963-1689
OPTICAL SERVICES
999 Adams St., Suite 200, St. Helena
Judy Flynn, Optician
❧ School Board: The monthly
meeting of the board of trustees of
the Calistoga Joint Unified School
District will be held at 6 p.m. at the
Calistoga Jr/Sr High School MultiPurpose Room, 1608 Lake Street.
For more information, call 942-4703.
14 TUESDAY
❧ Hazardous Waste Collection for
Households: Open to up-valley residents who have trash service or use
Clover Flat Landfill. No electronics, ammunition, explosives or radioactives. No business waste. From 9
a.m. - 3 p.m. at Upper Valley Compost and Recycling Yard off Highway 29 by Rutherford Grove Winery.
Can also reach site via Whitehall
Lane. No charge for the event. For
more information, call 253-4094.
❧ Youth Soccer: Calistoga Parks &
Recreation offers classes for children
ages 2 - 5. Start date is today; end
date is May 26. Tuesdays at Logvy
Park. 9 - 10 a.m./ages 2-3; 10 - 11
a.m./ages 4-5. Mini-Kickers is
coached by professional licensed
British coaches to ensure your child
has a positive soccer experience.
Contact Tom Shutt for the web link
and more information. 916-262-7542
or tshutt@challengersports.com.
❧ Earth Day at Calistoga Library:
Join us for a family crafts event.
1108 Myrtle Street, starting at 11
a.m. and continuing all day. We’ll be
reusing cardboard rolls to craft birdfeeders to hang from tree branches.
All supplies are provided. For more
information call library associate
Daniel Cottrell at 942-4833.
❧ Lengthen & Strengthen: For
adults at all fitness levels with
instructor Karen Mann, local Hatha
Yoga/Fitness instructor. Classes
every Tuesday and Thursday at the
Community Center, 1307 Washington Street, 10:30 a.m - noon. Fee is
$5 a class, no registration needed,
drop-ins welcome. Sponsored by
the city’s Recreation Services. Go
to www.calistogarecreation.com
❧ World of Outlaws Sprint Car
Races: At the Napa County Fairgrounds. For tickets go to http://dirtcar.ticketforce.com or call 1-877395-8606. For event information
visit www.woosprint.com
12 SUNDAY
❧ Mountain Volunteer Fire Department Breakfast: Join us for a pancake/steak & eggs breakfast today
DR. JULIE PERRY’S OPTICAL SHOP
Dr. Julie Perry is certified by the American Board of Ophthamology,
and her services include eye exams, refractions, contact lenses, small
incision cataract surgery, glaucoma checks and
laser treatments.
from 8:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. at the
Firehouse, 5198 Sharp Road. Adults
$10; kids 12 and under $5. For more
info, call 942-9289.
❧ Calistoga Bicycle Tour: Join
Napa County Landmarks for a Calistoga Bicycle Tour. Meet in front of
the Sharpsteen Museum, 1311
Washington Street, at 10 a.m. Check
in between 9:30 and 9:45 a.m. Fee:
$5/NCL members; $10/general. Two
free tickets with new membership!
RSVP requested but not required.
❧ Hazardous Waste Collection for
Businesses: There is a fee for use of
the service. Reservations are required. Call 1-800-984-9661. From
1 - 4 p.m. at Upper Valley Compost
and Recycling Yard off Highway 29
by Rutherford Grove Winery. For
more information, call 253-4094.
10 FRIDAY
Page 9
Stuffed
To The Rafters?
❧ Library Family Story:
Tuesdays through May 7 at the
Calistoga Public Library, 1108
Myrtle Street, at 10:30 a.m. Each
storytime lasts 20 - 35 minutes and
is enhanced with picture books,
puppets, rhymes, songs and other
participatory activities. All ages.
Free. No registration required. For
more information call library associate Daniel Cottrell at 942-4833.
❧ Sit & Spin: The group meets
Tuesdays from 3 - 5 p.m. at the
Calistoga Roastery, 1426 Lincoln
Avenue. We spin, knit, crochet,
weave or stitch, so join us for a
pleasant afternoon doing what you
love. It’s free and all are welcome.
For more information contact Rose
LeClerc at roze.leclerc@gmail.com.
❧ Native Sons of the Golden West:
Social and dinner. At the Golf Course
Tucker Room, 2025 Grant Street,
from 4 - 10 p.m. For more information contact Jim Pence at 942-5531
or penceranch @yahoo.com.
15 WEDNESDAY
❧ Sharpsteen Docent Lunch: This is
the perfect opportunity for you to
learn more about the museum and its
community involvements. Meet &
greet at 11:30 p.m.; lunch is served at
noon at the Community Center. Raffle
prizes to win and wine will be served.
❧ HICAP Counseling and Advocacy Program: An advisor will be
in Calistoga at the Family Center,
1705 Washington Street, Suite G,
the first and third Wednesday of
each month from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Do you have questions about Medicare, Supplements, Long Term Care
Insurance? For questions or to make
an appointment call Elena Mendez
at 707-341-3185
❧ Native Daughters: The Native
Daughters of the Golden West Calistoga Parlor No. 145 meet at the
Community Presbyterian Church
Hall, Corner of Third and Washington Streets, at 1 p.m. If you were
born in California and would like to
join , contact Kathy McCloskey at
isckmc@yahoo.com or call 942-9525.
❧ Family Films: For all members
of the community Shows are in the
multipurpose room of CJSHS, 1608
Lake Street. Movie tonight is
ALMA award winner,“Under the
Same Moon.” Doors open at 6:30
p.m.; show starts at 7 p.m. Free admission. First come, first seated. More
info? Call JoAnne Miller, Director,
Educational Programs 707-2876921, or joanne.miller@pacbell.net.
OK TIRE STORE
OVER 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE
COME TO
BFGoodrich • Goodyear • Wheel Alignment and Balancing
504 Washington Street
Mobile Truck & Tractor Repair
942-6524
Sean Wilson, Owner
OPEN 7 Days a Week
STORAGE UNITS, BOXES & MOVING SUPPLIES
RV & BOAT STORAGE ALSO AVAILABLE
Kathy Brown, Manager
Hours: Monday – Friday 8 – 5 • 963-2343
CALISTOGA SELF STORAGE
910 Dowdell Lane, St. Helena
Locally Owned by Calistoga Residents
Public Notices
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
BY THE CALISTOGA PLANNING
COMMISSION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by
the Planning Commission of the
City of Calistoga that a PUBLIC
HEARING will be conducted on
Wednesday, April 22, 2015, at
5:30 p.m. in the Calistoga Community Center, 1307 Washington
Street, City of Calistoga, County of
Napa, State of California, at which
time and place testimony will be
considered on:
Rancho de Calistoga Setback
Variance VA 2015-1 & Design Review DR 2015-1: Consideration of a
variance to construct a new clubhouse office and social hall within
the required 30-foot front yard setback at 2412 Foothill Boulevard. The
Planning Commission will also consider a design review request for the
construction of the new structures.
This proposed action is exempt from
the California Environmental Quality
Act (CEQA) under Section 15302(b)
and 15305 of the CEQA Guidelines.
NOTICE: If you challenge the City’s
decision on this matter in court, you
may be limited to raising only those
issues you or someone else raised
at the public hearing described in
this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the Planning
Commission at, or prior to, the public hearing. Judicial review of any
City administrative decision may be
heard only if a petition is filed with
the court not later than the 90th day
following the date upon which the
decision becomes final. Judicial
review of environmental determinations may be subject to a shorter
time period for litigation, in certain
cases 30 days following the date of
final decision.
City of Calistoga
Date: 4/10/15
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
BY THE CALISTOGA PLANNING
COMMISSION
Beginning Friday, April 17, 2015 no
later than 4:30 pm, the Planning
Commission report for this item will
be available online at www.ci.calistoga.ca.us and at the City Offices
located at 1232 Washington Street.
For additional information, please
contact Erik V. Lundquist in the
Planning and Building Department
at 707-942-2830 or elundquist@ci.
calistoga.ca.us.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the
Planning Commission of the City of
Calistoga that a PUBLIC HEARING
will be conducted on Wednesday,
April 22, 2015, at 5:30 p.m. in the
Calistoga Community Center, 1307
Washington Street, City of Calistoga,
County of Napa, State of California,
at which time and place testimony
will be considered on:
BY ORDER OF THE CITY OF
CALISTOGA PLANNING
COMMISSION
Lynn Goldberg
Planning Commission Secretary
George Caravas Setback Variance VA 2015-2: Consideration of
a variance to enlarge and replace an
existing pump house 5 feet 6 inches
of the front property line at 2309
Grant Street. This proposed action is
exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) under
Section 15303(e) and 15305 of the
CEQA Guidelines.
NOTICE: If you challenge the City’s
decision on this matter in court, you
may be limited to raising only those
issues you or someone else raised
at the public hearing described in
this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the Planning
Commission at, or prior to, the public hearing. Judicial review of any
City administrative decision may be
heard only if a petition is filed with
the court not later than the 90th day
following the date upon which the
decision becomes final. Judicial
review of environmental determinations may be subject to a shorter
time period for litigation, in certain
cases 30 days following the date of
final decision.
Beginning Friday, April 17, 2015 no
later than 4:30 pm, the Planning
Commission report for this item will
be available online at www.ci.calistoga.ca.us and at the City Offices
located at 1232 Washington Street.
For additional information, please
contact Erik V. Lundquist in the
Planning and Building Department
at 707-942-2830 or elundquist@ci.
calistoga.ca.us.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY OF
CALISTOGA PLANNING
COMMISSION
Lynn Goldberg
Planning Commission Secretary
City of Calistoga
Date: 4/10/15
Page 10
Friday, April 10, 2015
Marketplace
Calistoga tribune
Ad Deadline is Noon Tuesday • Call 942-5181 • FAX 942-6508 • CalistogaTribune.com • $10 a Week
HELP WANTED
WELCOME CENTER AMBASSADOR
Hours: 24 p/wk (part-time) Schedule:
Thursday, Friday, Saturday (9:00 AM to
5:30 PM) Start Date: May 2015
Description: This position functions to
work within a Welcome Center operation. Ideal candidate must enjoy working
in an ever-changing, high-paced office,
interacting with visitors from all over the
world. This position requires experience
with multiple-line phones, strong computer skills, and ability to prioritize.
Teamwork is a must. Required Experience: • Prior receptionist duties: including multi-line phone, transferring and
taking messages • Ability to prioritize:
projects, guests, and phones • Must be
computer literate with strong MS Word
and Excel skills; Publisher and PPT a
plus • Knowledge of Calistoga and the
surrounding areas a plus but not a must
• Must be able to lift 25 pounds
IMPORTANT: All resumes and inquiries
must be submitted via email to:jobs@
calistogachamber.net (4/10/2x)
MASSAGE THERAPIST, experience
preferred, for an upscale spa in
Calistoga. This is a part time position.
Apply in person at 1339 Lincoln Ave. or
fax resume to 707-942-2511. (3/27/4x)
Busy Sam’s Social Club
Restaurant at Indian Springs
Resort and Spa in Calistoga
needs:
Servers, Line Cooks, Bussers,.
All positions, great pay, tips and
benefits. Start tomorrow. Contact
Kyrsta Scully at 707-709-2447 or
kyrsta@indianspringscalistoga or
drop in. (4/3/2x)
DESK CLERK
$13-$15 Hr
Apply at Golden Haven
Public Notices
ONE BEDROOM garden unit, utlities
included. $1,195 a month. Contact 415385-3733 (4/3/2x)
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE. Now
leasing Calistoga office center, 1705
Washington St. Great location with
excellent parking! Very reasonable rent,
including utilities and common area
maintenance. Nice conference room
provided. Four offices available. Contact
Marilyn McCoul, Broker at 707-9426225 (3/27/3x)
HAVE QUESTIONS? Give us a call, and
we’ll help. Subscriptions, advertising,
community news, and more. Call the
Tribune at 942-5181, e-mail us at editor@calistogatribune.com, or go online
to www.calistogatribune.com.
YARD SALE
FUNDRAISING YARD SALE at Cedar
Care Home. This yard sale is a fund raiser
for Esme Cortez. She is going to be an
exchange student in Sweden. Yard Sale
will be held April 11 and April 12 - 8:30am
to 4:00pm, at the Cedar Care Home parking lot, 1520 Cedar St. If you would like to
donate items to Esme’s yard sale please
call 490-6010. (4/3/2x)
THREE FAMILY YARD SALE - 1713
Maggie Ave., Saturday, April 11, 9am to
4pm. No early birds, please. Clothes,
housewares, furniture and more. (4/10/1x)
HUGE ESTATE garage sale, Saturday,
April 11 and Sunday, April 12 - 9am to
5pm. Three miles out Highway 128 from
Tubbs Lane. (4/10/1x)
boil your water or use an alternative water supply (e.g., bottled
water).
This is not an immediate risk. If it
had been, you would have been
notified immediately. Some people
who drink water containing disinfection byproducts in excess of the
maximum limit over many years
may experience liver, kidney, or
central nervous system problems,
and may have an increased risk of
getting cancer. These diseases,
however, are not caused solely by
chemicals in drinking water, but
result from many other factors.
If you have specific health concerns regarding the consumption
•
•
Visit us on the web at
www.calistogatribune.com
Tribune Puzzle Answers
sudoku
Crossword
BEAUTIFULLY RENOVATED Normandy style home with guest
house, art studio/workshop, in ground pool, and a master gardener
designed rose garden. Living room w/ fireplace, wood floors, crown
molding and indirect lighting, formal dining room, office/den w/ custom built-ins, media room, gourmet kitchen with top of the line appliances, custom cabinetry, La Rochelle tile counters, banquette and a
lovely screened in porch..
$1,420,000
BREATHTAKING-Soaring wood ceilings with walls of windows capture the
stark beauty surrounding this private, spacious three+ bedroom home with
office, game room, media room, wrap around deck, temperature controlled
wine cellar and small Petite Sirah vineyard. Eight acres just minutes to Calistoga and an easy 20 minutes to Santa Rosa Airport.
$2,250,000
BELLA VISTA VINEYARDS An incredible opportunity to own a one of
a kind property with over 180 acres in Napa and Sonoma County. Over
37 acres are planted to vineyard, with potential for winery, caves, plus
multiple building sites. Adjacent 26 acres with home are also available.
Vineyard/acreage:
$7,950,000
LOCATION: Three bedroom, 2 ½ bath, 2144 sq. ft. home in Centennial
Circle with views across Garnett Creek to vineyards and mountains. Spacious family room, living room, great location.
$770,000
NEW LISTING Nicely landscaped spacious yard, adorable 2+ bedrooms,
2 bath home with hardwood floors, updated kitchen, fireplace w/insert, just
a couple of short blocks to town. Great vacation home.
$545,000
WHAT A VIEW: Four bedrooms, 2 ½ baths, family room with fireplace,
new custom deck and fencing so you can enjoy the beautiful views of a
meadow and Mt. St. Helena. Freshly painted inside and out; great outdoor
spaces for entertaining and gardening.
$670,000
PRISTINE VALLEY WITH WINERY POTENTIAL - 59.7+/- acre estate
property located between Calistoga and Knights Valley. 4100sq. ft main residence, 900 sq.ft. guest house currently utilized as an office. Approx 25 acres
of vineyard – Cabernet, Old Vine Zin and 4+/-acres of Petite Sirah. Additional
plantable acreage and potential for Winery/Caves
$6,950,000
GREAT BUILDING SITE Two beautiful acres with filtered views of Mt. St.
Helena and the Palisades. Paved road, shared water for landscaping,
ability to hook to City water, and in the City limits.
$495,000
DEVELOPER’S DELIGHT – Double lot located just a few blocks from downtown Calistoga. 14,871 sq.ft lot with a quaint little house. Possible lot split or
build another house. Zoned R-2. Use your imagination.
$618,000
CALL FOR A FREE MARKET ANALYSIS ON YOUR HOME
continued
What happened to create the
TTHM’s level above the regulation level?
To protect drinking water from disease-causing organisms, or pathogens, chlorine is added to drinking
water as a disinfectant. However,
disinfection byproducts can form
when organic-rich water, is disinfected. A major challenge for the
City of Calistoga and all municipal
water systems is how to control
and limit risks from pathogens and
simultaneously minimize disinfection byproduct formation. Disinfection byproducts tend to be highest
when naturally-occurring organic
matter is elevated in our surface
water supplies from the Delta due
to prolonged drought conditions,
winter rains, and during periods of
long detention times in the North
Bay Aqueduct water transmission
main.
We routinely monitor for the
presence of drinking water contaminants throughout our entire
water system. As of October 2012,
the standard that applies to the
City of Calistoga’s system for disinfection byproducts changed significantly. The maximum limit for the
annual average of TTHM’s at each
sampling location is 80 micrograms
per liter (ug/L).
At the City’s sample location at
414 Washington Street the TTHM
results received on February 4, 2015
were 103 ug/l and averaged 85 ul/L
over the last twelve months at this
sampling location. This is above the
maximum level of 80 ug/L and
therefore requires the City to inform
What should I do?
• Maintenance Technician
We are seeking an experienced
Maintenance technician for
Calistoga Family Apartments
located at 1715 Washington Street,
Calistoga, Ca. 94515 Please
email your resume to Spereira@
cbhpm.com to schedule an interview today! Position is available for
immediate employment.
DID YOU KNOW that yard sale, garage
sale and estate sale ads (if the sale is in
Calistoga) are free in the Calistoga
Tribune? Give us a call! 942-5181.
Este informe contiene información
importante sobre su agua potable.
Para una copia de este articulo en
espanol, por favor llame al 707942-2828.
specific corrective actions
•areNoneeded.
You do not need to
Corporation for Better Housing
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
YARD SALE Friday April 17 and Saturday
April 18, 515 Washington Street, 8:00am
- 3:00pm. (4/10/1X)
of this water, you may wish to consult your health care provider.
Our water system recently exceeded a new drinking water standard
for disinfection byproducts called
total trihalomethanes (TTHM) in
the vicinity of your service meter.
Although this is not an emergency,
as our customers, you have a right
to know what you should do, what
happened, and what we are doing
to correct this situation.
Darlene Brissard • Sharon Carone
Brian Durnian • Ziggy Gutierrez
CALISTOGA FAMILY
APARTMENTS
FOR LEASE
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
ABOUT YOUR DRINKING WATER
City of Calistoga Has Detected
Level of Disinfection
Byproducts Above Drinking
Water Standards
HELP WANTED
FOR RENT
our customers of the results and
the reason why their water did not
meet regulations.
Due to the drought in 2014 the
City of Calistoga made the conscious decision to “bank” our local
surface water supply at Lake
Kimball and use more Delta water
from the State Water Project delivered through the North Bay
Aqueduct (NBA) transmission main
and which is treated by the City of
Napa. This decision was made to
preserve the local water supply in
the event the State curtailed our
NBA supply in 2014. If the State had
curtailed our water from the Delta,
and we had not managed our local
supply well, we could have been
severely limited in our ability to
meet the City’s water demands.
How we manage our water supply sources plays a significant role
in the formation of TTHM levels.
When we receive water from the
Delta, the water travels up to 38
miles in a pipeline before it enters
our water distribution system. Detention time in the NBA transmission main, or the time it takes for
the water to travel in that pipeline,
is a major variable to formation of
TTHM’s. Another contributing factor is the prolonged drought, the
accumulation of organic material in
the watershed, and the unusual
low flows in the Delta due to the
drought.
What is being done?
The City is operating our Kimball
Water Treatment Plant more often
and it has been providing water at
a lower TTHM value than the water
we receive through the NBA trans-
mission line. We will continue to
operate the Kimball Water Plant to
the greatest extent possible, while
at the same time taking into consideration current water supply
projections to ensure an adequate
local supply during peak demand
times.
We are managing our water
tanks to circulate more water
through the tank on a more frequent interval. More circulation
leads to lower TTHM values. We
also recently installed a mixing
device in the Mt. Washington tank
which should help reduce TTHM
formation. We are also exploring
methods to improving mixing in the
Feige storage tank.
We continue to test water samples and evaluate TTHM results
both from Kimball supplied water
and water from the NBA. Future
actions and plans are dependent
on the results of these tests. We
will be working closely with the City
of Napa to develop appropriate
methods to reduce formation of
TTHM’s. At the present time we
do not have sufficient information
to make recommendations for capital investments or when those
may occur and we will be working
closely with the State Division of
Drinking Water to develop appropriate corrective action.
ly (for example, people in apartments, nursing homes, schools,
and businesses). You can do this by
posting the public notice in a public
place or distributing copies by hand
or mail.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY OF
CALISTOGA PUBLIC WORKS
DEPARTMENT
Date: 4/10/15
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CALISTOGA CITY COUNCIL
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, by
the City Council of the City of
Calistoga that a PUBLIC HEARING
will be conducted on Tuesday,
April 21, 2015, at or after 7:00 p.m.
in the Calistoga Community Center,
1307 Washington Street, Calistoga,
County of Napa, State of California,
at which time and place testimony
will be considered on the following
item:
For more information, please contact Michael Kirn at (707) 942-2828
or 414 Washington Street, Calistoga, CA 94515.
Branstad Parcel Map Utilities
Waivers: Consideration a waiver
from undergrounding existing overhead utilities within the Branstad
Parcel Map pursuant to CMC
§16.02.080(B) and consideration of
an exception from the sewer connection requirements pursuant to
CMC §13.08.140. The property is
located at 957 Petrified Forest
Road. The Planning Commission
adopted a Mitigated Negative Declaration, in accordance with the
California Environmental Quality
Act, for the subject parcel map.
Please share this information with
all the other people who drink this
water, especially those who may
not have received this notice direct-
Beginning Friday, April 17, 2015, no
later than 4:30 pm, the City Council
report for this item will be available
online at http://www.ci.calistoga.ca.us.
For additional information, please
call the City Clerk’s office at 707942-2805.
NOTICE: If you challenge the City’s
decision on this matter in court, you
may be limited to raising only those
issues you or someone else raised
at the public hearing described in
this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City Council
at, or prior to, the public hearing.
Judicial review of any City administrative decision may be heard only if
a petition is filed with the court not
later than the 90th day following the
date upon which the decision becomes final. Judicial review of environmental determinations may be
subject to a shorter time period for
litigation, in certain cases 30 days
following the date of final decision.
BY ORDER OF THE CALISTOGA
CITY COUNCIL
Kathy Flamson
City Clerk, City of Calistoga
Date: 4/10/15
LIEN SALE NOTICE
Notice is hereby given pursuant to
Sections 3071 and 3072 of the
Civil Code of the State of California, the undersigned: Blackhawk
Autobody, 266 Soscol Ave., Napa,
CA 94559 will sell at public sale
on: April 23, 2015 at 10:00 a.m.
the following property: 1996 BMW
3281; LIC#6SNC 802; CA; VIN#
WBABG1325TET01861.
Pub. 4/10/15
LegaL
Notices
caLL 942-5181
for iNformatioN
Calistoga tribune
Friday, April 10, 2015
Page 11
Calistoga News
Public Notices
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000398
The following person(s): Eddings,
Seneca R., 1356 Trower Ave.,
Napa, CA 94558 is (are) doing business as: Crystal Clean Home and
Home Office, 1356 Trower Ave.,
Napa, CA 94558, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Individual. Registrant commenced
to conduct business under the
fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/10/2020.
Signed: Seneca Eddings
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 10, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/20, 3/27, 4/3, 4/10
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000415
The following person(s): Garske,
Samuel Edward, 1811 Aurora
Drive, Calistoga, CA 94515 is (are)
doing business as: Cellarmaster
Garske, Cellarmaster Garske
Wines, Garske Cellars, Garske
Family Wines, Garske Wines,
1811 Aurora Drive, Calistoga, CA
94515, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Individual. Registrant commenced
to conduct business under the
fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/13/2020.
Signed: Sam Garske
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 13, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: N. Turner, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/20, 3/27, 4/3, 4/10
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000439
The following person(s): Acres
Real Estate Services, Inc., 4402
Jefferson Street, Napa, CA 94558,
State: CA is (are) doing business
as: Estates & Vines, 4402
Jefferson Street, Napa, CA 94558,
County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under
the fictitious business name or
names listed above on: N/A.
Statement expires on: 3/16/2020.
Signed: Burt Polson, CEO
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 16, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/20, 3/27, 4/3, 4/10
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000423
The following person(s): Delicato
Vineyards, 12001 S. Hwy 99,
Manteca, CA 95336, State: CA is
(are) doing business as: Cowell
Station Wine Cellars, Cowell
Station Winery, Cowell Station
Wines, Locavore, Locavore
Vineyards, Locavore Wine Cellars,
Locavore Winery, Locavore
Wines, Surf Swim Wine, 1562
Airport Blvd., Napa, CA 94558,
County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the
fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/16/2020.
Signed:
Dorothy
Indelicato,
Treasurer
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 16 16, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000429
The following person(s): Sonoma
Wine Company, LLC, 9119 Graton
Rd., Graton, CA 95444, State: CA
is (are) doing business as: 2Sons
Winery, Federalist Vineyards,
September Hill Winery, 205-A Jim
Oswalt Way, American Canyon,
continued
CA 94503, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Limited Liability Company. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the fictitious business
name or names listed above on:
N/A. Statement expires on:
3/16/2020.
Signed: Jeffrey Harris, Chief
Financial Officer
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 16, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: N. Turner, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000442
The following person(s): Elegance
Properties LLC, 620 Trancas
Street, Napa, CA 94558, State:
DE is (are) doing business as:
Terra Valentine, Foretell Wines,
Old Village Wine & Spirits, 620
Trancas Street, Napa, CA 94558,
County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Limited Liability Company. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the fictitious business
name or names listed above on:
N/A. Statement expires on:
3/16/2020.
Signed: Helen Anest, Managing
Member
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 16, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000384
The following person(s): Scenic
Root Winegrowers LLC, 110
Camino Oruga, Napa, CA 94558,
State: CA is (are) doing business
as: Mise en Place, Page-Turner,
110 Camino Oruga, Napa, CA
94558, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Limited Liability Company. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the fictitious business
name or names listed above on:
N/A. Statement expires on:
3/9/2020.
Signed: Jonathan Pey, LLC
Managing Member
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 9, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: D. Paredes, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000440
The following person(s): Free Flow
Wines, LLC, 2557 Napa Valley
Corporate Dr., Ste. A, Napa, CA
94558, State: CA is (are) doing
business as: Pali Wine Company,
Robert Keenan Winery, 2557
Napa Valley Corporate Dr., Ste. A,
Napa, CA 94558, County of
Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Limited Liability Company. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the fictitious business
name or names listed above on:
7/1/2013. Statement expires on:
3/16/2020.
Signed: Heather Clauss, Manager
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 16, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000426
The following person(s): Heron
Wines, Inc., 205 Jim Oswald Way,
American Canyon, CA 94503,
State: CA is (are) doing business
as: Laely, Laely Wines, 205 Jim
Oswald Way, American Canyon,
CA 94503, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the
fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/16/2020.
Signed: Laely Heron, President/
Secretary
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 16, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
CIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED
TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000484
The following person(s): Marcum,
Ryan Lee, 425 College Ave.,
Angwin, CA 94508 and Northrop,
Max, 310 N. White Cottage Road,
Angwin, CA 94508 is (are) doing
business as: Caramella, Essence
of the Valley, Ghisolfo, La Perla
Winery, Le Pori, Northrop
Industries, Quit Your Bitchin', Uva,
Uva Vinum, Vocatus Uva, Wolf
Pack, 310 N. White Cottage Road,
Angwin, CA 94508, County of
Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Joint Venture. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the
fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/24/2020.
Signed: Max Northrop
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 24, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 3/27, 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
A.P.N.: 0051-411-230
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
T.S. No.: 2013-29843
Loan No.: 7110135568
A.P.N..: 0051-411-230
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY OF
INFORMATION REFERRED TO
BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO
THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE
COPIES PROVIDED TO THE
TRUSTOR
NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY
OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보 요
약서가 있습니다
NOTA: SE ADJUNTA UN
RESUMEN DE LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD NG
IMPORMASYON SA
DOKUMENTONG ITO NA
NAKALAKIP
LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ BẢN
TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC VỀ
THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI LIỆU
NÀY
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER:
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
DEED OF TRUST DATED 9/23/
2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN
EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE
OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST
YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER
Trustor: RICHARD G. ESPINOSA
AND LAURA ESPINOSA, HIS
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
Duly Appointed Trustee: Western
Progressive, LLC
Recorded 9/30/2005 as Instrument
No. 200500151139 in book ---,
page --- and rerecorded on --- as
--- of Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of Solano County,
California.
Date of Sale: 5/4/2015 at 10:30 AM
Place of Sale: AT THE SANTA
CLARA STREET ENTRANCE TO
THE CITY HALL AT 555 SANTA
CLARA STREET, VALLEJO, CA
Estimated amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $229,656.59
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR
CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK
DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL CREDIT
UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 5102 OF THE FINAN-
All right, title and interest conveyed
to and now held by the trustee in
the hereinafter described property
under and pursuant to a Deed of
Trust described as;
Street Address or other common
designation of real property:
88 CALHOUN STREET,
VALLEJO, CALIFORNIA 94590
The undersigned Trustee disclaims
any liability for any incorrectness of
the street address or other common designation, if any, shown
above.
The sale will be made, but without
covenant or warrant, expressed or
implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of the
note(s) secured by the Deed of
Trust. The total amount of the unpaid principal balance of the obligation secured by the property to
be sold and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances at
the time of the initial publication of
the Notice of Sale is : $229,656.59
If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return
of monies paid to the Trustee,
and the successful bidder shall
have no further recourse.
The beneficiary of the Deed of
Trust has executed and delivered
to the undersigned a written
request to commence foreclosure,
and the undersigned caused a
Notice of Default and Election to
Sell to be recorded in the county
where the real property is located.
NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS:
If you are considering bidding on
this property lien, you should
understand that there are risks
involved in bidding at a trustee
auction. You will be bidding on a
lien, not on the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should
also be aware that the lien being
auctioned off may be a junior lien.
If you are the highest bidder at the
auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned off,
before you can receive clear title to
the property. You are encouraged
to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens
that may exist on this property by
contacting the county recorder’s
office or a title insurance company,
either of which may charge you a
fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than one
mortgage or deed of trust on this
property.
Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the
total debt owed, it is possible that
at the time of the sale the opening
bid may be less than the total
debt.
NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER:
The sale date shown on this notice
of sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the
California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made
available to you and to the public,
as a courtesy to those not present
at the sale. If you wish to learn
whether your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable, the
rescheduled time and date for the
sale of this property, you may call
(866)-960-8299 or visit this Internet
Web site http://www.altisource.com/
MortgageServices/Default Manage
ment/TrusteeServices/Sales.aspx
using the file number assigned to
this case 2013-29843. Information
about postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur close
in time to the scheduled sale may
not immediately be reflected in the
telephone information. The best way
to verify postponement information
is to attend the scheduled sale.
Date: 3/18/2015
Western Progressive, LLC, as
Trustee.
c/o 30 Corporate Park, Suite 450
Irvine, CA 92606
Automated Sale Information Line:
(866) 960-8299
http://www.altisource.com/Mortgage
Services/DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices/Sales.aspx
For Non-Automated Sale
Information, call: (866) 240-3530
Tamika Smith, Trustee Sale
Assistant
THIS FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE
Pub. 4/3, 4/10, 4/17
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000460
The following person(s): Turnbull
Wine Cellars, 8210 St. Helena
Hwy, Oakville, CA 94564, State:
CA is (are) doing business as:
Tramuntana Wines, 8210 St.
Helena Hwy, Oakville, CA 94564,
County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under
the fictitious business name or
names listed above on: N/A.
Statement expires on: 3/20/2020.
Signed: Patrick O'Dell, President
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 20, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: D. Paredes, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/3, 4/10, 4/17, 4/24
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000490
The following person(s): Broman
& Associates, Inc., 945 Deer Park
Road, St. Helena, CA 94574,
State: CA is (are) doing business
as: Murex, Mystery Wine Cellars,
945 Deer Park Road, St. Helena,
CA 94574, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under
the fictitious business name or
names listed above on: N/A.
Statement expires on: 3/25/2020.
Signed: Robert L. Broman,
President
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 25, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/3, 4/10, 4/17, 4/24
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000502
The
following
person(s):
Appellation Trading Company,
LLC, 55 Enterprise Ct., Ste. 5,
Napa, CA 94558, State: CA is
(are) doing business as: Benoni
Wine Co., Carl Roy Wine Co.,
Chad Wine Co., Clos Julien Wine
Co., Fiancetto Wine Co., Groupon
Wines, Nichols Wine Co., Pat
Paulsen Vineyards, Rockledge
Wine Co., Sueno Profundo Wine
Co., The Grifter Winery, TrousseChemise Wine Co., 55 Enterprise
Ct., Ste. 5, Napa, CA 94558,
County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Limited
Liability
Company.
Registrant commenced to conduct business under the fictitious
business name or names listed
above on: N/A. Statement expires
on: 3/27/2020.
Signed:
Charles
Bartlett,
Managing Member
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 27, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: D. Paredes, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/10, 4/17, 4/24, 5/1
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000467
The following person(s): Folio
Wine Company, LLC, 550 Gateway
Drive, Ste. 220, Napa, CA 94558,
State: CA is (are) doing business
as: Medusa, Medusa Old Vine,
Medusa Old Vine Cellars, Medusa
Old Vine Company, Medusa Old
Vine Zinfandel,
Medusa
Vineyards, Medusa Wines, 550
Gateway Drive, Ste. 220, Napa,
CA 94558, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Limited
Liability
Company.
Registrant commenced to conduct business under the fictitious
business name or names listed
above on: N/A. Statement expires
on: 3/20/2020.
Signed: Chris Millich, Manager
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 20, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: L. Rodriguez, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/10, 4/17, 4/24, 5/1
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000525
The following person(s): Napastak,
610 First St. #14, Napa, CA 94559,
State: CA is (are) doing business
as: Napastak, Napastak Cellars,
Napastak Napa Valley, 2485
Stockton St., Napa, CA 94559,
County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under
the fictitious business name or
names listed above on: 4/1/2014.
Statement expires on: 4/1/2020.
Signed: Arthur Haroutiounian,
President
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: April 1, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: S. Wright, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/10, 4/17, 4/24, 5/1
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000458
The following person(s): Brown,
Steven, Trustee of the Brown
Family Trust Dated May 28, 1992,
2100 Big Ranch Rd., Napa, CA
94558 and Brown, Tina, Trustee of
the Brown Family Trust Dated May
28, 1992, 2100 Big Ranch Rd.,
Napa, CA 94558 is (are) doing
business as: Stetina Vineyards,
1801 Aetna Springs Rd., Pope
Valley, CA 94567, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Trust. Registrant commenced to
conduct business under the fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/19/2020.
Signed: Steve Brown, Trustee
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 19, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: D. Paredes, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/10, 4/17, 4/24, 5/1
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000504
The following person(s): Delicato
Vineyards, 12001 S. Hwy 99,
Manteca, CA 95336, State: CA is
(are) doing business as: Blended
Hearts, Blended Hearts Vineyards,
Blended Hearts Wine Cellars,
Blended Hearts Winery, Blended
Hearts Wines, 1562 Airport Blvd.,
Napa, CA 94558, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Corporation. Registrant commenced to conduct business under the
fictitious business name or names
listed above on: N/A. Statement
expires on: 3/27/2020.
Signed: Dorothy Indelicato,
Treasurer
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 27, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: D. Paredes, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/10, 4/17, 4/24, 5/1
PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2015-0000514
The following person(s): Vannatta,
John, 2191 Patton Ave., Napa, CA
94559 is (are) doing business as:
JSV Printing, 2191 Patton Ave.,
Napa, CA 94559, County of Napa.
This business is conducted by:
Individual. Registrant commenced
to conduct business under the fictitious business name or names
listed above on: 3/1/2015. Statement expires on: 3/30/2020.
Signed: John Vannatta
I hereby certify that this copy is a
correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
DATED: March 30, 2015
John Tuteur, Napa County ClerkRecorder
By: D. Paredes, Deputy ClerkRecorder
Pub. 4/10, 4/17, 4/24, 5/1
PAGE 12
Friday, April 10, 2015
Sports
RACES
Continued from page 1
will open at 3 p.m. each day, with
Will Call and the Ticket Window
opening at noon both days. Twonight weekend tickets and single
night tickets are available by visiting http://dirtcar.ticketforce.com/
eventperformances.asp?evt=163
or by calling 1-877-395-8606.
“We are thrilled to bring a show
of this magnitude to the Calistoga
Speedway in April,” said Chris
Morgan of Motorsports Ventures.
.“Having the World of Outlaws &
King of the West Sprint Car Series
co-sanction the weekend should
give us one of the best fields of
Winged 410 Sprint Cars we’ve
seen in some time at Calistoga.
“Adding in the Civil War Series
and the Hunt Series is icing on the
cake so we hope the fans are excited, because I know we are.”
Over the last couple years Calistoga Speedway has seen a total
transformation, with immense
work going on at one of California’s most famous dirt ovals. In
W I L D C A T S
April 6-10
Saturday, April 11
Tuesday, April 14
Wednesday, April 15
Thursday, April 16
addition to the various facility
upgrades that include a new catch
fence all the way around the track,
a booming new sound system and
new scoreboards, lots of work
went into the racing surface, which
is now wider and features a better
degree of banking, with smoother
transitions into the corners. The
racing has benefited and has been
given a big thumbs-up by all involved.
“The amount of work that has
gone into Calistoga Speedway
has been simply amazing,” commented Morgan. “All the support
that the track has received is pretty
special and with the effort they’ve
put into this place, it’s launched it
right back up there with the best
dirt track facilities we have on the
west coast.
“If you haven’t had the chance
to visit Calistoga since all the
work, we truly encourage you to
come and check it out. Last year’s
World of Outlaws weekend was
great and it will be even better this
time around.”
The World of Outlaws Sprint
Car Series double header last sea-
Serving the Napa Valley Since 1963
942-6754
G A M E
S C H E D U L E
Absolutely subject to weather, grades, missed buses, cancellations, scheduling, and change of mind, etc.
Shaw Plumbing
For Sales &
Service Call
CALISTOGA TRIBUNE
Commercial &
Residential
SPRING BREAK
Track team travels to the Twilight Invitational at SRJC
Baseball team hosts Sonoma Academy, 4 p.m.
Tennis team welcomes Geyserville for a match at 4 p.m.
Swim team travels to Willits for 4 p.m. meet
son was swept by Kasey Kahne
Racing teammates Brad Sweet and
Daryn Pittman. The victory for
Sweet, a native of Grass Valley,
California, was his first career triumph at the Calistoga half-mile.
Pittman’s victory during the finale led a podium sweep by KKR,
with Sweet coming home second
and Red Lion, Pennsylvania’s
Cody Darrah in third. The all-time
Calistoga Speedway track record
also fell during the weekend, with
the first sub 16-second laps recorded in track history. Brownsburg,
Indiana’s Joey Saldana set the
mark on opening night at a blistering 15.731.
The King of the West Sprint Car
Series competed at the track last
June and local favorite Rico Abreu
from Rutherford scored victory in
the Wine Country Classic.
Even more track work had gone
on prior to the event and what
transpired was some of the best
Winged Sprint Car racing seen at
Calistoga. Passing was prevalent
all night long and Abreu captured a
great main event over Chico’s Jonathan Allard and eventual KWS
champion Kyle Hirst. The King
of the West 410’s will once again
compete in the Wine Country Classic on June 27 of this year.
All Time Legend Leroy Van Connett is named Grand Marshall, celebrates 80th Birthday at Calistoga.
After recently winning the Chili
Bowl Midget Nationals and announcing his intention to run the
NASCAR K&N Pro Series East,
Abreu will return to Calistoga
Speedway on April 11 & 12 looking to add a World of Outlaws win
at his home track.
The now 23-year-old, last season captured the Louie Vermeil
Classic with the USAC/ CRA Series in August and also won opening night with the USAC Western
Midgets. Abreu also tallied a pair
of top-five finishes with the World
of Outlaws at the Napa County
Fairgrounds facility last April
aboard his familiar Abreu Vineyards No. 24 machine.
The Saturday April 11 appearance at Calistoga by the Civil War
360 Sprint Car Series presented
by Flowmaster will mark the first
race at the track for the tour since it
picked up the victory in 2012.
TWIN P INE CASINO & HOTEL
WIN YOUR SHARE OF
ConstruCtion • repairs • remodeling
SEWER SERVICE
WATER HEATERS
GARBAGE DISPOSALS
TEN WINNERS EVERY SATURDAY!
711 Washington Street • Calistoga
6:00 pm–11:00 pm
Lic. No. 398901 • FAX 942-0763
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
BY THE CALISTOGA
CITY COUNCIL
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the City Council of the City of
Calistoga that a PUBLIC HEARING will be conducted on Tuesday,
April 21, 2015, at or after 7:00 p.m. or thereafter in the Calistoga
Community Center, 1307 Washington Street, City of Calistoga, County
of Napa, State of California, at which time and place testimony will be
considered on:
Zoning Ordinance Amendment ZOA 2014-6: Consideration of
amendment to the Downtown Commercial and Community Commercial
Zoning Districts to allow off-site automated teller machines (ATMs).
The proposed amendments are exempt from the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) under Section 15061(b)(3) of the
CEQA Guidelines.
Beginning Friday, April 17, 2015 no later than 4:30 pm, the City Council
staff report for this item will be available online at http://www.ci.calistoga.ca.us. For additional information, please contact the City Clerk’s
office at 707-942-2805.
Earn one ticket for every 50 points.
WIN A WHITE
CHEVY COLORADO
April 24th • 10:00 pm
Earn tickets daily.
A BLUE CHEVY COLORADO
May 30th • 10:00 pm
EVERY WEDNESDAY
FREE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
EARN 100 POINTS
Every Friday & Saturday • 9:00 pm–1:30 am
Silver Medal
$5 free play
Gold Medal
$10 free play
NOTICE: If you challenge the City’s zoning, planning, or other decision
in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in
written correspondence delivered to the City Council at, or prior to, the
public hearing. Judicial review of any City administrative decision may
be heard only if a petition is filed with the court not later than the 90th
day following the date upon which the decision becomes final. Judicial
review of environmental determinations may be subject to a shorter
time period for litigation, in certain cases 30 days following the date of
final decision.
BY ORDER OF THE CALISTOGA CITY COUNCIL
Kathy Flamson, City Clerk
April 10, 2015
CHEVY TRUCK & CASH GIVEAWAY
Private Reserve
$15 free play
April 17th & 18th
AUDIOBOXX
Rock-n-Roll
April 24th
C.A.M. BAND
Rock, Soul and Blues
One per day.
15 Miles North
of
Calistoga oN hwy 29, MiddletowN • 707-987-0197 •
Must be 21 years or older. Management reserves all rights.
www.twiNPiNe.CoM